Forum:School Projects
Topic:I NEED HELP QUICK!!! lands around the castle
Want to register?
Who Can Post? Any registered users may post a reply.
About Registration You must be registered in order to post a topic or reply in this forum.
Posting Tips: You will receive a much better response to your questions if you include your age and as much detail as possible. Both of these things allows a person to give you an answer specific to your question and age group.
Your UserName:
Your Password:   Forget your password?
Message Icon:                                           
                                          
                                          
Your Reply:


*HTML is OFF
*UBB Code is ON
[IMG] UBB Code Not Allowed!

Options Show Signature: include your profile signature. Only registered users may have signatures.

If you have previously registered, but forgotten your password, click here.

*If HTML and/or UBB Code are enabled, this means you can use HTML and/or UBB Code in your message.

T O P I C     R E V I E W
kazaz_bcHey, i am 13 years old and i am doing a social studies project with my friend. It is on Castles of the Middle Ages and we were haveing touble finding information with on of our topick, Land Around tha Castle. We asked our teacher what the question ment and she said that it had to do with the type of land arounf the castle (grass?dirt? etc.) and what was around it (like villages, andything interesting). So basically, we need help on things out side the castle waslls in the rest of the kingdom. Can you guys PLEASE HELP US!!!!
THANK YOU SOOO MUCH!
BYE!
shan
MerlinNot an easy one.

To start with, it's best to understand a castle as the economic, social and political centre of a certain area. The nobleman who owned the castle (and it doesn't have to be the same that lived in it) may also own some estates around it: forrests, fields and small villages or even a town with a market. These posessions in most cases did not form something like a closed territory . It may be that one part of a forrest was in the posession of an abbey, a church or the king himself, whereas another part belonged to the castle nearby. Or some part of a village was in the posession of a lord who lived far away, whereas another part and the feudal rights over the whole area (as jurisdiction) was connected to the castle. So things could be very complicated.

The castle was very often itself the centre of a farm, and the people of the villages in the nobleman's posession were obliged to work a certain number of days on that fields.

Hope this helps...
Merlin

GordonIn Scotland there was also a good deal of variety. Many of our tower houses were essentially fortified farm houses, administrative and domestic centres for a farming community with a legal requirement to fortify due to English incurions. Cultivated land, would therefore have been the scene with long strips of land (riggs as opposed to fileds) allocated for each crop and open grazing for cattle.
In the highlands, the land was not so fertile, and rather wild and barren in places, and the scene would have been much as it is today, with remote castles sitting amongst the hills and glens, with a few sheep and 'black cattle' straying about.
Another model was the lowland baronial seat, where the traditional medieval town plan was prominent, castle and church at oposite ends of a long main street, with this lined by houses and sthops, each with a long narrow portion of land strung out behind. Close by would be a mound which acted as a gallowshill, and another which acted as the meet, or court hill where trials took place. The link below may be helpful. http://www.britannica.com/magazine?ebsco_id=7397

Contact Us | Castles on the Web

Powered by: Ultimate Bulletin Board (UltimateBB), Version 5.40
© Infopop Corporation (formerly Madrona Park, Inc.), 1998-1999.



Castles on the WebHome
Castles on the WebIntroduction
Castles on the WebCastle Quest
Castles on the WebSite of the Day
Castles on the WebCastle Tours
Castles on the WebCastle Collections
Castles on the WebNew Sites
Castles on the WebPopular Sites
Castles on the WebPhoto Archive
Castles on the WebMiscellaneous
Castles on the WebCastles for Kids
Castles on the WebCastle Glossary
Castles on the WebPalaces & Homes
Castles on the WebMedieval Studies
Castles on the WebAccommodations
Castles on the WebTop Rated
Castles on the WebCastle Postcards
Castles on the WebHeraldry Links
Castles on the WebMyths & Legends
Castles on the WebOrganizations
Castles on the WebCastle Books
Castles on the WebAbbeys & Churches
Castles on the WebWeapons/Supplies
Castles on the WebRandom Site
Castles on the WebAdd A Castle Site
Castles on the WebAcknowledgements
Castles on the WebSearch Options
Castles on the WebPlease Help Us!
Castles on the WebPlease Link To Us
Castles on the WebContact Us

Castles on the Web Copyright 1995- | Privacy Policy